John Fleming (Australian priest)
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John Fleming | |
|---|---|
| Born | 12 June 1943[1] |
| Education | University of Adelaide Australian College of Theology Griffith University |
| Spouse | Alison |
| Children | 3 |
| Parent(s) | Thomas Robert and Gwenda May Fleming[1][2] |
| Years active | 1970 – present |
| Ecclesiastical career | |
| Religion | Christian |
| Church | Anglican (1970-1987) Roman Catholic (1995-) |
| Ordained | 1970 (Anglican) 1995 (Roman Catholic) |
Congregations served | St. Nicholas Church, Chiswick Church of the Good Shepherd, Plympton |
John Irving Fleming is an Australian priest and bioethicist. He was the founding president of Campion College.[3] Fleming was originally an Anglican priest but later became a Roman Catholic priest. He is currently suspended from public ministry and is living in retirement in South Australia.
The son of an Anglican priest, Fleming graduated with a BA from the University of Adelaide, a Licentiate in Theology from the Australian College of Theology and a PhD in philosophy and bioethics from Griffith University.[3] His PhD thesis was titled "Human rights and natural law : an analysis of the consensus gentium and its implications for bioethics".[4]
Career
Fleming was a high-profile Anglo-Catholic priest in the Anglican Church of Australia's Adelaide diocese. He was ordained in 1970. In the early 1970s, he was a university chaplain and priest in charge of St Paul's Church in Adelaide and dean and vice-master of St Mark's College at the University of Adelaide. From 1977 to 1978, he was assistant curate at St. Nicholas Church, Chiswick, in West London; and from 1978 to 1987 was the rector of the Church of the Good Shepherd, Plympton, in Adelaide.
He became a Roman Catholic in 1987. Although married with three children, he was given a papal dispensation permitting his ordination in the Catholic Church in 1995. As a Roman Catholic layperson, from 1987 to 1995, he was the founding director of the Southern Cross Bioethics Institute. As a Roman Catholic priest, he continued as director of the institute from 1995 to 2004; from 2001 he was also a faculty member of the John Paul II Institute for Marriage and Family. He was the founding president of Campion College from 2004 to 2009.
Fleming was an adjunct professor of bioethics at the Southern Cross Bioethics Institute until its closure in 2012. He served on a number of bioethics boards including as a foundation member of UNESCO's International Bioethics Committee (1992-1996). From 13 July 1996 to 13 July 2016, he was a corresponding member of the Pontifical Academy for Life.[5] Fleming was a member of the SA Council on Reproductive Technology (1998-2004) and a member from 2002 of the Gene Technology Ethics Committee set up under the Australian Gene Technology Act 2000.
Fleming was a weekly columnist of The Advertiser in Adelaide and presented radio programs for a number of years. He campaigned against the ordination of women in the Anglican church during that time and debated Patricia Brennan, then Convenor of the Movement for the Ordination of Women, on television in 1985.[6] In 2005, while president of Campion College in Sydney, he hosted a short-lived talkback radio program on 2UE.[7]
Community
Fleming was an elected delegate to the 1998 Australian Constitutional Convention associated with Australians for Constitutional Monarchy.[8] In 2003, he was appointed by the Howard government to the council of the National Museum of Australia with his term ending in 2009.[9]
Personal
Fleming is married to Alison and they have three children.